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" I Miss Alice M. Smith, of Minneapolis, Minn., tells how woman's monthly suffering may he quickly and permanently relieved by Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, "Duak IYvkma.u:? T have never before ffiven my endorsement for iiny medi< ine, but Lydia U. IMnklmm's Vegetable t'om]>ouiid has {. Id ! so much t- i. y 1'. t ' f ! hhe jnakiuv an exception in this case.* For t v. ? ycai every month 1 would have two days or severe pain iui<l could find no n Ifef, but one day wlu n visiting a friend I run across Lydia 11. I'i b. :>' W--<-table f'ompound, - slro bad used it with tne Ik'sJ results sed me to try it. I found thatit worked wonders with me; t i. v < xj> rienee no pain and only had to use a few bottles to brin-j a t,.is v. 4;<Ie; ;;tl < haniro. i use it oc lasionally now when I am ex< illy . I or worn < i ? Miss Alici: M. Smith, 804 Third Ave., JSou.h Mini, aj olis, Minn., (Jhairnian Executive Committeo Minneapolis Study t'iub. Ileautv and strength in woiih'ii\anish early in life l?eeinise of monthly pain or some menstrual irregulari {y. Mo iiy sit 1?r - ii? nily and see tliclr best jiifts fade away. Lyd a ham's Vej etable Compound helps women proserin- rotiM<liicv> of form and 4' 1. * - j i <iinn:.i> Ol lil>V IM'tilUSC II IIIUU*'S III'', Cili'l"' l( 11. ' Ol'fi; 111ISMI healthy. It carries women safely throi:j*!i the :;u?m*ul crises and is the safeguard of woman's licalth. ^ Tin; truth about, this great medicine i* to!?l in the Letters l'rom women belli^ published in tliis paper constantly. i Mrs. C. Kleinschrodt, Morrison, II!.. s?.vs: ? ~ " Dkau Mits. l*inkiia>i:? I have sulVerrd ever since I was ihktm n y .11 > <>;' v. i?l? my nu-nsts. They w#re inv;p:l:.r an,! very painful, i doctored a 1:1 -at d< . 1 I n I . ' -'i. VjfcJ " flic li< I aih t> eel lue In in l.ydiu M. Im.?v J jSl' Pink hum's Y? u. table Compound, which I (lid,and after takii: . .1 1 -w lou;< ?? f it, 1 1 >und r u Me-nst mat ion is now reirnViv and without J pain. I nin enjoying tetter ho.il'.h than I have BSE^jlor sometime." fM f JTjtff{[\ymf|V How is it p< f. 11- to make it plainer I I ilinilr l tO *hnt hydia K. I'iiik'iaiii**. Vegetable Com ' I ' J||' I 1 pound will positively i ? '.j> ?.i 1 Mi-ii women? Ilj Ad women :uv eon: *'tuted alike. ri< ft and poor, I high and low, ? nil suffer from the same organic troubles. Surely, no one run wish to iii.min week and sickly, discouraged with life and n<> ', m for tie fe.t <?. win n ;>r. . f i- ?o unmistakable that Lydisv II. ! M uk ham's Vegctnbh ( ompoinul liilei.re monthly suffering? all womb ami ovarian troubles, . -e, ;.tl tin; !.-? peculiar to women. ^ Clir.^ri FORFEIT If iw ennnot forthwith pctm** the n-l >). ? .?t* mof ab-w? testliuoni.ils. which will pr.w i VwUktU 1.vtin i-:. < ??. T vim. M-I*.. t Cotton Gin Owners < & ? d ^ We handle all grades of j d <4 GIN SAWS RR.TKTi'.PIS * * $ AND RIBS !! AND TWINE < ^ Ptlo:<6 98-2 rings. J W. O. McKEOWN & SONS, < j Chester Co. Cornwell, S. C. g Leave Lancaster And you won't get your PRINTING dorn just like you want it. We do all kinds o J ob Printing at The Enterprise Office. % |SOME PKESIDEMIAL POSSI-! BILITIES. Oui Washington correspondent1 writes this week of presidential , possibilities and probabilities :, ' Lie says : So far as Mr. Cleveland anil I I Mr 1 ? - iukui iaii ai c i-uuceruru, WB niRV i , as well eliminate them to begin; I wit';. K.teii of these gentlemen i has many admirers among public i men who visit the national capi- j ! tal. Many men who have always been ardent admirers ofCkveland since his first election as president, end who left the party with j | him in 1SOO, and supported the j republicans on the money question, have told me that he is out i of the running as a candidate] I next year on account of the prej-j udice against the third term fori any man. Many men who !o;, a!!vl supported Mr. Bryan in and j ] 1900 agree that he cannot possi j ' bly be called r candidate again, j I 1 u,iy still admire niiii ior it.s i manhood, his brilliance of intel-j j lect, iii-i oratory,his steadfastness 1 to principle and devotion to the j cause of the people, but they adj mit that he cannot again be a , candidate, j They realize that the issues will not be the same uexl year anu lot people have put the .-cul of their condemnation on some of the issues on which he twice led the party to defeat. They appear to realize that the chief I issue uext year will he one with j j which Mr. Bryan has not been i 1 sufficiently identified?the trust' issue?to make him an available1 candidate even if he had not j been brought under the ban of i the displeasure of thousands of I men who will next year pupport the democratic ticket on that! very issue. Therefore, they dis-| card him as a possibility in the I next race. .Senator Arthur I'. Gorman b?s many friends anions the men who come to Washington on olli eial business and many of them have named him as the most available man for the democrats to nominate next year. They say that when he returned to the senate last March after absence of four years he was quickly and gladly given his old place as floor leader of the democratic forces in the senate, which proves conclusively that his powers as a leader liave not been dim tried by Ins absence from the senate, that ' it is so recognized by his colleagues, which fact gives him prestige all over the country. ^ They mention his service to the I ? country in the memorable lorer1 * bill fight in l$hl), his nd-oitnoss! Wlas a leader,'his long record as a P democrat, his knowledge of the ^ public men of the country and v his signal ability as an organizer, . having, as a chairman of demo^ cratic national committee in 1SM * brought victory to the party. ? They claim that he will be very j ! Htrong in the ea-tern states,where v the party needs votes in order to " win, ami all seem imbued with P an intense desire to win next X ftii t .i . " PI yen r. i ney cmim inar senator; ^ I k Gorman was regular in the camI paigns of ls0?! and 1000, and supported the ticket loyally, yet he I P would make a very acceptable candidate to the conservative business interests of the east. The boom for Judge Alton B. ^ Parker, of New York, seems to have been frostbitten by being planted too early. The judge, ^ himself, has lately taken a stand r that practically eliminates him I From the race as a candidate. Still, he has some warm admirers and friends among the democrats who visit the national capital and who claim for him that he i* thelThui- i?^ most available mtu to lead the 1 utive, a democratic forces next year., antUriai They have not much to say con-1 justice t< cerning his record, as that is con- they c'ai fined almost solely to the judicial nated. bench, but thev sav he is a most This i< amiable and learned man. Those of npinu who prefer some other candidate1 cians wli say he is tied up with David B., national Hill, and would he controlled hv me conoi him and they distruetiiill. Judge tiul cam Barker's name may go before the punt of convention, but it is not likely I for presi that the strtfB of New York will present him as the candidate of b. that state. Everything now in- Bersons dicates a trend away from Judge or Dv?p Barker. want if I There have lately turned "P here many friends of the Flon. tion ret William Uandolph Hearst They ] similatu seem to he the most enthusiastic j food tha bunch among all the politicians i ftkles hit' who have discussed this thing of j the next democratic candidateI strength with me. They ell seem to hoi saturated with the idea that Mr.! SIMM Hearst is the onlv man who can! ,i ,, . Demai win and they are willing to give I . a reason for the faith that ir in '* W them. In the tirst place they say that Mr. Hearst is the .inly pro- ^ prietor of a great daily newspaper ." .1 u , | . | butcher in the nor,'h who lovnllv support ' 1 0M * ed the ticket in 1890 and 1900.| ami who fought as hard for tliei ticket as auv man on the ticket. , A . "lou I Iliev claim that anv man nomi, .. reminde nated in 1904 who did not loyally "in* support the ticket, or who. even, .. , , , .... , . , 'Now I oi w as lukewarm, will be defeated . ,. . ... for dwe next v?ar t. r the rpason fhnt- tim .1*1 r \ mP r"V 'oyal democrats 111 the states of | , t . xt* .. a -. , ! hlid I do New York, Connecticut and Newi .. . ii . . i ?on .Jersey wui vote tlio socialist la . . . ... . sage, an bor ticket which will give those! ... . Iauv?no states, absolutely essential to . . ' , . M"0 prici democratic success, to the republicans. They claim that MrQearst ,, . ?>ot w ho has endeared himself to the . ... laboring people cf the country by { aCfj0\j a fighting their battles at all times, DeWitt' can carry every center of indus S.l'hilpc trial activity in the country, thus ing a bi assuring democratic success in the states of Connecticut, New ^ oHh York ami New Jersey, Delaware, 8HUJ Maryland, Illinois and California, pleasant which means democratic victory :ir0 certi in the nation, and they say that Craw victory is what they are atter. They say that a man who has the i business interests at stake as The w those possessed by Mr. Ilearst, j,j8 OWn whose payroll amounts to over a k I 1\ IIU J $4,000,000 a year, and who han the bad never ha'l a controversy with a | u,a single man ever on that payroll,Lract a \ can not help being a satisfactory of an o| candidate to the thouaanda of told you conservative business men of fhe country who did not support the] ticket in the campaigns of 18%! ^ lXA tak and 1900. I in hi? * They advance the'claim that n . . but toe ho is tno very aputhoosis oi j j ruen ^ atiii-tiu.it, the only niuu in the ful of CI country who has ever gone after era and the trusts with his own money |ln',a" ' and made them tremble, audi. j k that the trust question will bo1?tlt, \ uppermost in tho next campaign.! Lake la hence, their man is a democratic F. Macl platform in himself. That he is the very embodiment of Jeil'er- Ever i souian and -Jacksonian democracy a:h peo| That lie is a man who can hold standi in all the votes that Bryan got and I and thri add the vote of labor reeardlessi w4 ot past political attiliation, also B#arftka the vote of thousands of men who Signature are in business and whose of ^ business is jeopardized by the cormorant trusts of the ?om? country. That he is absolutely ^ e independent of the trusts and ne^ an< the money interests of the couti- ^ YY |i 0 n try, and that he possesses the money personally to give the party me greatest campaign ever jV 'V ' waged iu the nation aud can e duplicate every dollar of fat fried out of the trustn by the i Kodo! republican campaign managers.) Ql{ is young, an able exeephilanthropiat, a humi, iku bouet-t l?.v r of 0 the people In short, in he can win if noun- * 1 about a fair concensus >n of democratic politio havo lately vi it d the capital an I talked to ernine the next pr? sidenpaign from t tie standa democratic candidate dent. at All You Want. troubled with indigestion epsia can eat all *hev hoy v. ill take Kodv Dysdire. This remedy pre^ stomach for the recepeiftien, digestion and asnof all ol the vylr 'some t may be eaten, "d eu'' ^-sti v > nrye ma- i* * of f hat gives h* and y Si "d by Crawfi Hroe. M Y AM) I>EM S>. rid and Biipp'o on'fc . overn price, ways t tinew. Business t o r ' ;? | >vems them. The other epped up to a German and out of curiocirv askl' the price of e.ir age?" cents a pound,"' aid. asktd 'J5 this morning," I d him r'?i? w\s von I had cr>nie. niivt cot so_je 1 eeiis him nty cents. Dot maKes citation for selling ohear* ^ n't lose noddinga. ' , 'JSk ?o, I didn't wantanv sau id the man didn't h;\ve demand, no suppi> -yet' s of sausage went down. cat Pill Pleasure. . that are potent in their mi pleasant in ell et are b Little Early Kisei>. W. >t ofAlbauyGaMpays"Durlious attack 1 took one. i it was it did me more at calome blue-mass or ?r pills I ever took and at 10 ciuio it eileotcd uie ;ly." Little Early lit ers inly an ideal pill." Sold ford L>ros. ltU VlN LEVKS. ise father trys to know son. it of men have gmie to . . trying to bo good feliowa. iverage wo/tiHn ran exvurld of satisfaction out pportunity of sayiug "L 8<). >v when four years old ?^ < ; w ii 1) colic and c rr.mp i tnmncb. 1 son t for the pie injected mernhine, child Uept getting worse. ?ve liiru hall a teaspoon* hamharlain's Colic, Choi- / Diarrhoea Remedy, and m hour he was sleeping; n ' 'covered.?F. L. Wil- I oil Lake, Wis. Mr. Wil)ook Keeper for the ^iiell u;:ber Co. For sale by J. ley & Co., druggists. since David smote (ioli:>!o have had a habit of ; off at a safe distance iwing rocks at sin. ft. RlTO-n TA. /) Ihe Kind You Have Always Bought tiow or other we rather > baby that is painfully 1 cle^n. It is a sign that having a good time a wife gets a letter from 3and she is not satisfied t conveys the ingormaiion s awfully lonesome. I flvcnaneln Riiha J |WIU WM0 v |o?t? what you eat.